American Horror
Story: Asylum was certainly more ambitious than the show’s first season,
now retroactively re-titled American
Horror Story: Murder House. The scope of the story was bigger, the
production values higher and the characters murkier. And while I personally
felt like it wasn’t nearly as scary as the inaugural outing (more on that in a
minute), I do think that the show made all the right strides toward developing
not only as a series, but also in terms of being taken more seriously than just
a gimmick-y horror show that changes stories whenever it gets bored.
Um.. think you've got a little something in your eye there, Sister... nope, still there...
Certainly a major theme of the season was misogyny is all
its ugly forms. The repeated number of rapes in this season would have been
laughable if it wasn’t disturbing. Lana bore the brunt of most of the anger
against women, but Sister Jude saw her fair share as well. And poor Shelly
could not have been a clearer message if she was wearing a neon sign instead of
the drab jumper and mutation make-up she spent most of her time in. It’s
tempting to chalk most of that up to “the times they lived in” and try to
remember that this was a period show for the majority of this season, but it
felt like more than that was going on. Just like it could be tempting to
unravel all these threads into some kind of statement about religion or the
Catholic church’s oppression of minorities, women, homosexuals and anyone it
didn’t agree with, but then the corroborating evidence never seemed to arrive.
Which may well be the main takeaway of the season – the subplots
that never really plotted. When aliens first showed up at the beginning of the
very first episode, I was honestly not surprised. AHS is a series that will throw literally anything to the wall to
see if it sticks, so aliens were actually almost quaintly conventional. But what
did they do? We never got what they were after and we never learned anything
about them other than that they apparently had nothing better to do with their
time than muck about with Kit’s life. Likewise, why did Arden’s Nazi past
matter so much if we never got anything for it other than the parallels between
the Nazi internment camps and the Asylum itself and returning theme of the
inmates, including those woods zombies, as chattel in either case?
I was legitimately creeped out by the second episode “Tricks and Treats” when the possessed boy was brought to the asylum for an exorcism.
Exorcisms and possession scare the daylights out of me (blame my Catholic
upbringing) and when I saw that demon possession was going to a component of
this season, everything clicked for me. The 1960s was probably the last great
era of Catholicism in the United States and so to pair that timeframe with a
demonic possession story seemed inspired to me. But then, that pesky little
devil never really did anything other than get the best one-liners and
generally make Sister May Eunice one of the most fun characters to watch. Much
like the aliens, it felt a little like the demon’s heart just wasn’t really
into this story.
It leads to the question of what really is horror,
especially on a television series? True to promises made last summer before the
season aired, this season was completely ghost-less, a remarkable turnabout
from the parade of endlessly horny poltergeists in Murder House. Asylum’s horror was much more rooted in
how frightening average, normal people can be all on their own, which is
probably why the alien and possession subplots fell so flat and why watching
Lana’s transition from Intrepid Girl Reporter to rag doll abusee to eventual
Living Moral Ambiguity Machine was so interesting. The entire question gets summarized nicely in the end of course, as Sister Jude not-so-subtly reminds the viewers of the very Nietzsche-esque message of the season - when you stare into madness, madness stares back at you.
Is it a mirror? Is it a reflection? Is it an album cover?
A final takeaway, though an obvious one, is that Jessica
Lange continues to rock every single scene she finds herself in. I don’t know
if an established career actress can ever legitimately be said to be the
breakout star of a show, but if that’s possible than that’s what Lange has done
in two seasons. Her award-winning depiction of Constance the fading southern
belle was every bit as memorable as the harsh, demented but ultimately
sympathetic Sister Jude. Given enough time, American
Horror Story may be able to run an effective season without Lange, but
thankfully it doesn’t have to just yet.
Speaking of which, it’s never too early to ponder what we
might see from season three, premiering in just a scant seven months. Here’s
what we know so far:
First, several veterans will be returning for the next
season including Lange, Francis Conroy (Old Moira, the Angel of Death), Sarah
Paulson (Lana), Evan Peters (Kit, Tate), Lily Rabe (Sister Mary Eunice) and
Taissa Farminga who played Violet in season one. Kathy Bates (Misery) has also been announced as a
main character based on someone who was apparently real. As is now practice for
the show, creator Ryan Murphy says that he has dropped a hint as to next season’s
story and location in this year’s episode “The Name Game”. Given the jukebox
playing “I’ve Put A Spell On You”, speculation is leaning strongly toward witches
being a theme next season. Murphy has also said that he wants to get back to
the “evil glamour” aspect of the show, which bodes well not only for Jessica
Lange never having to wear a habit again, but also serves as a possible hint
itself.
Call yourselves warned, people. You’ve got seven months
to stitch together your Pillow of Fear in preparation.
1 comment:
I stitch my pillow of fear out of the face skin of my enemies!
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